Campus remembrances of conflicts past

Illustration
by Bo Brown

Dear Benny,I was walking past the west wing of Van Pelt-Dietrich Library Center
the other day and noticed there is a plaque dedicated to the memory
of the Penn alumni who perished on 9/11. Are there other memorials
on campus to Penn alumni, faculty or staff who died in other conflicts?— Lest
We Forget

Dear Remember Me,Yes, there are. After a little sleuthing and fact-checking with the staff
of the University Archives, I found these campus memorials to conflicts
past:

A tablet in 200 College Hall is dedicated to the “Sons of the University
who died to uphold the laws of their country in the War of the Great
Rebellion”—the Civil War.

Memorial Tower, the 37th Street entrance to the Quadrangle, was dedicated
in 1901 to the memory of Penn men who served in the Spanish-American
War.

Three plaques inside the Quad—one on each side of the Memorial
Tower arch and one at the entrance to Class of 1887 dormitory in Fisher
Hassenfeld College House—honor Penn grads killed in World War I.

The flagpole on 33rd Street opposite Smith Walk was dedicated in 1952
to the men of Penn who died in service to their country from 1740 to
1950.

And finally, there is the Peace Sign in front of Van Pelt-Dietrich
Library, dedicated in 1970 as both an expression of “our commitment to peace
and the principle of self-determination of peoples” and sorrow
over those killed in Vietnam, including Penn alumni serving there.

Dear Benny,What’s the oldest document in
the University Library?— Ancient Book
Lover

Dear Bibliophile,According to Rare Book Librarian Michael
Ryan, it’s a papyrus fragment
from Egypt. Professor of Religious Studies Robert Kraft, who has studied
the document, says it dates back to the second or third century BCE.

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